When man first attempted verbal communication through the vibration of the vocal-chords, what later became known as speech was born.
In early man, survival necessitated the use of all one's senses in conveying and receiving information. Man, during his evolution, narrowed and came to believe that the verbal was the critical and only means of communication. As a large portion of the civilization became less in touch with the responsibility of personally fulfilling their immediate needs in the move from predominately rural, to city and suburban life, survival took on a different meaning, and our desire to stay open on all auric levels was replaced by a need for protection of a different kind. Our sensory perceptions were assaulted, and personal space allotment became challenged. The verbal became the dominant and sometimes only means of communication.
Animals, in contrast, never veered from being complete auric sensors for vibrational information. They remain open receptors for hearing the voices that speak throughout the body.
We are all vibrational auric beings, with physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual aspects.
We limit the ways in which we may access information when we remain in the belief system of the spoken word as the only vibration that speaks.
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